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internal-comms-skill skill

/internal-comms-skill

This skill helps craft clear, empathetic internal announcements and leadership messages that align with change initiatives and engage employees.

npx playbooks add skill 404kidwiz/claude-supercode-skills --skill internal-comms-skill

Review the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.

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SKILL.md
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---
name: internal-comms
description: Expert in corporate communication, employee engagement, and change management. Use when drafting internal announcements, change communications, leadership messages, or employee updates. Triggers include "internal announcement", "employee communication", "change management", "company update", "leadership message", "town hall".
---

# Internal Communications

## Purpose
Provides expertise in crafting clear, empathetic, and strategic internal communications. Specializes in change management messaging, employee engagement, and translating complex organizational updates into digestible content.

## When to Use
- Drafting company-wide announcements or updates
- Communicating organizational changes (restructuring, layoffs, acquisitions)
- Writing leadership messages or executive communications
- Creating employee engagement content
- Preparing town hall or all-hands meeting content
- Crafting policy change announcements
- Developing crisis communication for internal audiences
- Building communication plans for major initiatives

## Quick Start
**Invoke this skill when:**
- Writing internal announcements or company updates
- Communicating sensitive organizational changes
- Crafting leadership or executive messages
- Developing employee engagement content
- Planning internal communication strategies

**Do NOT invoke when:**
- External marketing content → use `/content-marketer`
- Technical documentation → use `/technical-writer`
- Customer-facing communications → use `/customer-success-manager`
- Legal contract review → use `/legal-advisor`

## Decision Framework
```
Communication Type?
├── Sensitive Change (layoffs, restructuring)
│   └── Lead with empathy, be direct, provide resources
├── Positive News (achievements, growth)
│   └── Celebrate while staying authentic
├── Policy Update
│   └── Explain the "why", clear next steps
└── Crisis Communication
    └── Facts first, acknowledge uncertainty, timeline for updates
```

## Core Workflows

### 1. Change Announcement
1. Identify key stakeholders and audiences
2. Determine timing and channel strategy
3. Draft message with empathy-first framing
4. Include clear "what this means for you" section
5. Provide resources and next steps
6. Plan for Q&A and follow-up communications

### 2. Leadership Message
1. Define the core message and call to action
2. Write in authentic voice (not corporate-speak)
3. Connect to company values and strategy
4. Acknowledge challenges honestly
5. End with forward-looking statement
6. Review for tone and clarity

### 3. Communication Plan
1. Map all affected audiences
2. Sequence messages by priority
3. Select appropriate channels per audience
4. Draft key messages and talking points
5. Prepare FAQ document
6. Schedule cascade and feedback loops

## Best Practices
- Lead with the "why" before the "what"
- Use plain language, avoid jargon and acronyms
- Be direct about difficult news—don't bury the lead
- Always include clear next steps or calls to action
- Acknowledge emotions during sensitive changes
- Test messages with diverse audience representatives

## Anti-Patterns
| Anti-Pattern | Problem | Correct Approach |
|--------------|---------|------------------|
| Burying bad news | Erodes trust | Lead with key information directly |
| Corporate jargon overload | Message lost in buzzwords | Plain language, concrete examples |
| No "what's next" | Leaves employees anxious | Always include clear next steps |
| One-size-fits-all | Misses audience needs | Tailor by role, location, impact |
| Delayed communication | Rumor mill fills void | Communicate early, update often |

Overview

This skill provides expert internal communications guidance for corporate teams handling announcements, change management, and employee engagement. It helps draft clear, empathetic messages for leadership, HR, and program owners. Use it to translate complex organizational updates into actionable, audience-tailored communications that preserve trust and clarity.

How this skill works

The skill analyzes the communication purpose (e.g., change announcement, leadership message, policy update) and recommends structure, tone, and channels. It produces message drafts, short FAQs, talking points, and a simple rollout plan with audience mapping and timing. For sensitive scenarios it prioritizes empathy, clear next steps, and resource links.

When to use it

  • Company-wide announcements or product/strategy updates
  • Organizational changes: restructuring, role changes, acquisitions, layoffs
  • Leadership messages, CEO or executive communications
  • Town halls, all-hands scripts, and Q&A preparation
  • Policy changes, compliance updates, and role-impacting guidance
  • Crisis situations needing fast, factual internal updates

Best practices

  • Lead with the "why" before the details to provide context and reduce confusion
  • Use plain language; avoid jargon and unnecessary acronyms
  • Be direct on difficult news and include clear next steps or available resources
  • Tailor messages by audience and channel rather than one-size-fits-all
  • Test drafts with a small, diverse group and prepare an FAQ and follow-up cadence

Example use cases

  • Draft a CEO note announcing a strategic reorganization with empathetic framing and role-impact guidance
  • Create a town-hall agenda, talking points, and moderator prompts for a leadership Q&A
  • Prepare an internal crisis update that lists verified facts, immediate actions, and when the next update will occur
  • Develop a staged communication plan for policy changes, mapping audiences, channels, timing, and escalation paths
  • Write employee engagement content that connects an initiative to company values and desired behaviors

FAQ

How do I decide which channel to use for a message?

Map the audience and message sensitivity: use email or intranet for documented announcements, live town halls for complex or sensitive topics, and manager cascades for role-specific impact.

What tone should leaders use during difficult changes?

Use an authentic, empathetic tone: acknowledge impacts, explain the rationale, provide concrete next steps, and offer support resources.

How soon should we communicate during a change?

Communicate as early as possible with available facts, commit to a timeline for updates, and avoid long information gaps that fuel rumors.